@bwoebi I sincerely doubt anyone here is old enough to have ever seen a merlin doing anything in production, it's a legendary thing in it's own right... in the same way that you've presumably heard of the Spitfire, the Focker Wolf and even the Ford Model T... they are landmark achievements
@bwoebi Pretty well known at this point. I realise audio-only podcasts maybe somewhat logistically challenging for you but if you can I highly recommend you listen to bbc.co.uk/programmes/b049y9pj, very interesting debate on the subject
I have a query where I would like to receive a data base on user location (Haversibe Formula), but in some cases user have the option to sort the data by either distance only or with posts.time DESC.
Currently I get data by distance or distance with posts.time DESC, but when I do a LEFT JOIN in...
@bwoebi have or need? I'm aware of what they are although not sure the extent of the improvement with current tech... also obviously highly subjective and difficult to relate to for me, the worst I've ever had is glue ear and that is when I was about 4 so don't remember it
I do have a friend who got a burst eardrum while playing football and had some skin grafted from his arse. Needless to say, he gets the piss taken out of him a lot. He reckons it's basically 100% of original hearing though.
@bwoebi Again, highly subjective and possibly somewhat personal question, but interested to know how much of a difference you would estimate that it makes?
(feel free to decline to discuss further if you wish)
That's the thing, I have no idea how one would derive such numbers, because it's so subjective it doesn't really seem measurable, and somehow straight measurements of electrical activity don't seem like a good metric to me
- when do I begin to hear - how much of the single-syllabe words I identify correctly at 65 db - how loud noise can be relative to short "sentences" of 5 words in order for me to hear about 50%
@bwoebi Aside from the obvious caveat that this is highly dependent on grasp of language these seem reasonable to me... I imagine that German is easier than French? More "hard" sounds, kind of more abrasive when spoken, seems like it would cut through more?
@DaveRandom actually, electric activity measurements are to register when my brain begins to notice, which is quite reliable. The hard part is finding the values where it's moderately loud and too loud.
and that's what's happening for me too… I have only like a 22 electrode in my cochlear. Then I get averaged values in, so that it sounds the most similar to the real world.
hey bob, I've got a really weird code coverage report from phpdbg, but I'm not sure how to detect if it's just phpunit code coverage render messing up:
@bwoebi Yes this technique is known as "selective frequency compression" (sometimes "frequency amalgamation") in telephony, whereas DSL uses "rare-band frequency trimming" (i.e. cut the top and bottom freqs that are usually inaudible/not reproduced very well by telephone speakers) and shoving extra data into those filtered bands
So yeh, sounds like you're right and I misunderstood what you were saying
@DaveRandom I believe I have something from a bit over 100 Hz to 8-10 kHz … not 100% sure… I usually see these numbers on the monitor of the technician when he's configuring it…
@bwoebi What people hear in this case is usually 200Hz because of stacked resonance from the copper transit medium, same paper, give me 5 mins to find it I know I have a PDF of it somewhere
@bwoebi I can't find that doc it's lost in my badly organised filing system, when I come across it I'll ping it to you, it's about using resonance in the nasal cavity to bypass the eardrum and send signals directly into the auditory nerves (turns out everyone already does this) but it also anecdotally documents a bunch of really weird experiments that were done in the 60s-70s related to how proximity to a lot of electrical activity affects the nervous system in general
it's a geniunely great read, quite engagingly written for what's basically a scientific paper
Also there's something that I imagine is in the same place written by the guy who wrote pretty much on his own the image processing library that basically every automated number plate recognition system uses, this also stands out as some really dry material made really interesting by a good writer